Business leaders told President Jacob Zuma at a meeting last week that trust between the government and the private sector was destroyed when the South African leader fired his finance minister in March, Telkom chairman Jabu Mabuza said.
“We had a private dinner with the president and we raised lots of issues,” Mabuza, who is one of the leaders of the so-called CEO Initiative, said in an interview on Thursday at the World Economic Forum on Africa in Durban. “We raised our concern that our working together, the trust, has been destroyed by the developments of the last few weeks.”
Zuma ordered Pravin Gordhan, who was with business and labour leaders in London to meet investors on 27 March, to return home and dismissed him four days later, prompting the rand to plunge.
Since being reappointed in December 2015, Gordhan led efforts to retain the nation’s investment-grade credit rating, meeting regularly with business and labour union leaders and foreign investors. S&P Global Ratings and Fitch Ratings cut their assessment of South Africa’s debt to junk after Gordhan was removed.
Other concerns raised by the group of business leaders include state capture, the management of state-owned companies, particularly power utility Eskom, the delay in signing the Financial Intelligence Centre Amendment Bill and the Mineral and Petroleum Resources Development act, Mabuza said.
Zuma’s office announced on 29 April, a day after he met with the business leaders, that he signed the Fica bill, aimed at fighting tax evasion and money laundering. The law will make it easier to monitor the financial activities of politically connected individuals.
The president pledged to meet with business leaders after he returns from the World Economic Forum gathering to respond to some of the other concerns that were raised, Mabuza said, without being more specific. — (c) 2017 Bloomberg LP